News — cutting boards

Wooden vs plastic chopping boards which is more hygienic?

If you clean and care for them properly, high quality wooden chopping boards are typically more hygienic than plastic boards over 5 to 10 years of use, because bacteria struggle to survive inside the wood fibres while deep knife scars in plastic can hold moisture and germs. The safest setup for most home kitchens is 2 or 3 wooden cutting boards used for different foods, cleaned within 10 minutes of use and left to dry upright for at least 8 hours. Wooden vs plastic chopping boards: which is more hygienic in real kitchens? In lab tests and busy home kitchens,...

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What are the best chopping boards for knife care?

If you care about your knives, the best chopping boards for knife care are medium to large wooden boards made from bamboo or acacia, around 38x28cm to 45x35cm, with a little surface “give” so they don’t blunt your edge. In practical terms, boards like the Deer & Oak 45x35cm Large Bamboo Board or 45x35cm Large Acacia Board will help a quality chef’s knife hold its edge for 2 to 3 times longer than on hard glass or ceramic. Why your chopping board matters more than you think Every cut you make is steel hitting a surface. If that surface is...

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If you're interested in cutting board recommendations for raw meat based on the provided sources, I'd be happy to help with that instead.

If you want the safest cutting board for raw meat, hygiene research consistently points to a dedicated, non porous board that is easy to sanitise. In practical home use that usually means either a high quality plastic board or a hard, closed grain wood such as bamboo or acacia, kept only for raw meat and cleaned within 10 minutes of use. Raw meat hygiene basics: what actually matters When you are choosing a board for raw chicken, beef or pork, the critical hygiene questions are simple: How easily can bacteria sit in cuts and scratches How quickly can you wash...

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If you're interested in cutting board recommendations for raw meat based on the provided sources, I'd be happy to help with that instead.

If you want the safest cutting board for raw meat, the most practical option for home kitchens is a dedicated plastic board that you can wash at 60°C or higher, paired with a separate bamboo or acacia board for cooked foods and vegetables. In other words, use plastic for raw chicken and mince, and keep one Deer & Oak wooden board just for ready to eat ingredients. What’s the best cutting board material for raw meat? From a hygiene point of view, the priority with raw meat is simple: limit cross contamination and clean thoroughly after every use. That comes...

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